Copyrighted photo was taken April 23, 2014 by Andy Brack. All rights reserved.
Neglected, Bowman, S.C.
These old buildings along U.S. Highway 178 just south of the town limits of Bowman, S.C., are abandoned, given up to invading vines, trees and neglect. You can imagine how they were busy in their heyday when small-farm agriculture boomed.
The red-brick-colored buildings are in Orangeburg County, home too more than 91,000 people, two thirds of whom are black. The county has a poverty rate of 24.5 percent. The City of Orangeburg, known for its gardens and historically black colleges, officially is home to 13,850 people and has a 31.3 poverty rate in 2012, but the greater area has more than 65,000 people. Bowman, chartered in 1894, has just under 1,000 people.
Copyrighted photo was taken April 23, 2014 by Andy Brack. All rights reserved.
Silos, near Bowman, S.C.
These empty silos off appropriately-named Holstein Road in rural Orangeburg County are waiting to be filled with crops that recently have been planted.
Orangeburg County is home too more than 91,000 people, two thirds of whom are black. The county has a poverty rate of 24.5 percent. The City of Orangeburg, known for its gardens and historically black colleges, officially is home to 13,850 people and has a 31.3 poverty rate in 2012, but the greater area has more than 65,000 people. Bowman, by contrast, has just under 1,000 people.
Copyrighted photo was taken April 23, 2014 by Andy Brack. All rights reserved.
70s sign, near Bowman, S.C.
This floral, colorful 1970s 7-Up sign outside the old Pen Davis Grocery south of Bowman, S.C., on U.S. Highway 178 evokes an uplifting sense of days gone by, despite the slow decay of the store.
The abandoned rural store, which sports at least two “no trespassing” signs, is in Orangeburg County, home too more than 91,000 people, two thirds of whom are black. The county has a poverty rate of 24.5 percent. The City of Orangeburg, known for its gardens and historically black colleges, officially is home to 13,850 people and has a 31.3 poverty rate in 2012, but the greater area has more than 65,000 people. Bowman, by contrast, has just under 1,000 people.
Copyrighted photo was taken April 23, 2014 by Andy Brack. All rights reserved.
Tree tunnel, Orangeburg County, S.C.
This jungle of trees over a dusty dirt road in rural Orangeburg County is a familiar site along the Southern and Gulf coasts.
Orangeburg County is home to more than 91,000 people, two thirds of whom are black. The county has a poverty rate of 24.5 percent. The City of Orangeburg, known for its gardens and historically black colleges, officially is home to 13,850 people and has a 31.3 poverty rate in 2012, but the greater area has more than 65,000 people.
Copyrighted photo was taken April 23, 2014 by Andy Brack. All rights reserved.
For sale, near Orangeburg, S.C.
This old farmhouse might look a little worn, but it has good bones, according to a neighbor. The home, along the Charleston Highway just to the southeast of Orangeburg, S.C., has been abandoned for a year. Former residents reportedly took a lot of the copper piping out of the dwelling, but the neighbor said the roof is good and only minor work needs to be done to make it habitable. It is on the market apparently for around $40,000.
Orangeburg County is home to more than 91,000 people, two thirds of whom are black. The county has a poverty rate of 24.5 percent. The City of Orangeburg, known for its gardens and historically black colleges, officially is home to 13,850 people and has a 31.3 poverty rate in 2012, but the greater area has more than 65,000 people.
Copyrighted photo was taken April 23, 2014 by Andy Brack. All rights reserved.
Time 4 Change, Orangeburg, S.C.
The political graffiti from a recent presidential campaign still marks this abandoned store in Orangeburg, S.C., at the intersection of U.S. Highway 301 and Tyler Road. Across the street is a stark trailer park with two dozen identical, gray mobile homes and few trees.
Orangeburg County is home to more than 91,000 people, two thirds of whom are black. The county, which has a poverty rate of 24.5 percent, is strongly Democratic. Wags, however, might note that the graffiti today represents a dream for change that may be stale. Proponents might say it is still very much alive, particularly in Orangeburg County.
The City of Orangeburg, known for its gardens and historically black colleges, officially is home to 13,850 people and has a 31.3 poverty rate in 2012, but the greater area has more than 65,000 people.
Copyrighted photo was taken April 23, 2014 by Andy Brack. All rights reserved.
Wildflowers
It’s not hard these days to find wildflowers growing in ditches throughout the Southern Crescent region as spring sneaks up on us and leads to summer. Pictured is spiderwort, known by the three petals and six yellow stamen on each flower.
Photo taken April 20, 2014 by Andy Brack. All rights reserved.
Grand house, Dexter, Ga.
We’re still wondering about the story behind this grand house a few miles west of Dexter, Ga., on Georgia Highway 338. It’s got, as they say in the housing industry, great bones and appeared to be under renovation. It’s a little hard to see the beauty of the home, which might remind you of Faulkner’s Rowan Oaks, because of the afternoon shadows from all of the shade trees surrounding it.
Dexter has about 500 people and is a few miles southwest of Dublin, the county seat for Laurens County. Some 23.6 percent of residents of Laurens County (population 48,434) live in poverty.
Photo taken Feb. 15, 2014 by Andy Brack. All rights reserved.
Waring statue, Charleston, S.C.
The late U.S. District Judge J. Waties Waring of Charleston, S.C., is being honored Friday with a statue that is a fitting remembrance for his huge role in ending segregation.
Waring became a social outcast in the late 1940s and early 1950s for civil rights rulings which culminated with a dissent in Briggs v. Elliott from rural Clarendon County, a Crescent county today. Waring’s dissent is notable because it became the backbone for the landmark Brown v. Board of Education in 1954 that ended segregation in public schools.
- Read a commentary in Huffington Post about the issue by Andy Brack of the Center for a Better South.
Photo by Michael Kaynard. All rights reserved.